숲가에서 뛰어내리다

Jumpin' at the Woodside
'숲에서 점프'
싱글 by Count Basie
방출된1938년[1] 12월 17일
녹음된1938년[1] 8월 22일
장르.흔들다
라벨.데카
송라이터베이시[1][2] 백작, 에디 더럼

'Jumpin' at the Woodside'는 1938년 카운트 베이시 오케스트라가 처음 녹음한 곡으로 밴드의 대표곡 중 하나로 꼽힌다.처음 발매되었을 때 이 곡은 빌보드 차트 11위에 올랐고 4주 동안 그 자리를 지켰다.그 이후로, 그것은 자주 녹음되는 재즈 스탠다드가 되었다.

곡 상세

이 곡은 1938년 8월 22일에 데카용으로 녹음되어 그해 [1]12월 17일에 발매되었습니다.그것은 11위까지[1] 올랐고 4주 [3]동안 차트에 있었다.1938년 오리지널 녹음에는 얼 워렌(알토 색소폰), 클레이튼(트럼펫), 레스터 영(테너 색소폰), 허셜 에반스(클라리넷)[4]의 솔로곡이 등장한다.

이 노래는 베이시 밴드의 "시그니처" [5][6]곡 중 하나이자 "즐겨"[7][4] 그리고 "스윙의 정의"로 여겨진다.

많은 라이너 노트가 이 곡의 이름을 베이시에게만 돌리고 있지만 역사학자들과 다른 사람들도 밴드 멤버 에디 [1][2]더럼에게 돌리고 있다.그 시대의 많은 베이시 곡들처럼, 그것은 [6]밴드가 공동으로 만든 "헤드 어레인지먼트"였다.설리번은 더럼이 1937년에 작곡했고 베이시가 [1]그것을 다듬었다고 말한다. 곡은 Jammin' for the Jockpock'과 John's Idea와 같은 초기 곡들에 바탕을 두고 있다.더럼은 녹음될 때 [1]밴드를 떠난 상태였다.

제목에 있는 "점핀"이라는 단어는 3중 엔트레이다 – 춤의 동의어 또는 [8]섹스의 동의어인 "관절 is jumping"에서와 같이 활기찬 것을 의미한다.

우드사이드 호텔

제목에 있는 위치는 할렘 142번가 7번가에 위치한 Woodside Hotel을 가리킵니다([2]그 후 철거되었습니다).그것은 Love B에 의해 운영되었다.흑인[9] 우즈는 다수의 "딩기 플롭 하우스"를 운영했으며, 그 중 일부는 "불미스러운 평판"[10]을 가지고 있었다.하지만 우드사이드는 재즈 뮤지션들과 니그로 리그 야구팀들이 분리독립 [11]기간 동안 뉴욕에 머물 수 있는 인기 있는 장소가 됨으로써 두각을 나타냈다.나중에 우즈는 "할렘의 월도프"[10]라고 불리는 훨씬 더 고급 호텔인 테레사 호텔을 운영하는 데 관여한 것으로 더 잘 알려지게 되었다.

밴드는 우드사이드에 반복적으로 머물렀고 심지어 호텔 [12]지하실에서 리허설도 했다.가수 엘라 피츠제럴드(가끔 밴드와 함께 공연하기도 했다)도 1937년 밴드가 로즈랜드 [2]볼룸에서 연주할 때 우드사이드에 머물렀다.

기타 녹음 및 출연

이 노래는 브로드웨이 쇼 헬자포핀뿐만 아니라 그 [13][14]시대의 다른 쇼에서 극단 화이트의 린디 호퍼스에 의해 유명한 린디 홉 댄스곡에 사용되었다.이 루틴은 YouTube에서[15] 볼 수 있는 1941년 영화 버전에 녹음되었습니다(라이센스 [14]상의 순서에 따라 영화가 다른 음악으로 개봉되었습니다).

수년간 수많은 베이시 음반 외에도, 이 노래는 라이오넬 햄튼,[16] 몽크 몽고메리,[17] 오스카 [18]피터슨, 장고 라인하르트,[19] 버디 리치,[20] 그리고 다른 가수들에 의해 녹음되었다.1957년헨드릭스 램버트, 헨드릭스 & [21]로스가 연주할 곡에 가사를 썼다.

Gene the Dancing Machine GeneThe Gong Show에 출연하는 것은 이 [22]노래의 오프닝 소절과 함께 선행될 것이다.

이 노래는 1993년 영화 '스윙[23] 키즈'와 1999년 '스윙!' 그리고 2010년 '컴 플라이 어웨이'[24]와 같은 브로드웨이 뮤지컬에서 들을 수 있다.

비디오 게임 Fallout 76에서는 게임 내 라디오 방송국 '애팔래치아 라디오'[25]에서 이 곡의 카운트 베이시 버전이 재생된다.

레퍼런스

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Sullivan, Steve (2013). Encyclopedia of Great Popular Song Recordings, Volume 2. Minneapolis: Scarecrow Press. p. 455. ISBN 9780810882959. OCLC 793224285.
  2. ^ a b c d Nicholson, Stuart (2004). Ella Fitzgerald: A Biography of the First Lady of Jazz, Updated Edition. London: Routledge. pp. 50–51. ISBN 9781136788130. OCLC 884745086. Toward the end of 1937, Ella moved again, this time to the Woodside Hotel at 2424 Seventh Avenue at 142nd Street, to be close to Jo Jones, the drummer from the Count Basie band. The band had recently hit town and was playing the Roseland Ballroom, and most of its members were staying at the Woodside, which achieved a kind of immortality with Basie's hit "Jumpin' at the Woodside....Drummer Hal Austin remembered Ella at the Woodside: 'When she was living in the Woodside Hotel, 'Jumpin' at the Woodside'! Eddie Durham wrote that tune. That was a good-time building!'"
  3. ^ "Songs from the Year 1938". TSORT - The World's Music Charts. Retrieved February 26, 2017.
  4. ^ a b Larkin, Colin (2011). The Encyclopedia of Popular Music, 5th Edition. London: Omnibus Press. ISBN 978-0857125958. OCLC 804879997.
  5. ^ Milkowski, Bill (September 2013). "Review: Count Basie Orchestra - Jumpin' at the Woodside". Paste. Retrieved February 26, 2017. They kick off this Carnegie set with a Basie signature piece, "Jumping at the Woodside," named for the hotel where the band was based and where it also rehearsed when it first hit New York City. This driving number, fueled by swinging rhythm section and sparked by the shout choruses from the horn section...
  6. ^ a b Green, Alfred (2015). Rhythm Is My Beat: Jazz Guitar Great Freddie Green and the Count Basie Sound. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 57. ISBN 9781442242463. OCLC 904715782. Another Durham tune, "John's Idea," paid tribute to John Hammond, who was always in attendance during band rehearsals in the basement of the legendary Woodside Hotel in Harlem. This gathering place for black musicians and entertainers became the inspiration for one of Basie's key signature tunes, "Jumpin' at the Woodside." The Count takes credit as author of this tune but because of its multi-influenced beginnings, with a mixture of "Jammin' for the Jackpot" and "I Gotta Swing," both credited to Eli Robinson, it is listed in Chris Sheridan's Count Basie: A Bio-Discography as "head" (collaborative spontaneous arrangement). It was not uncommon in a Basie recording session to create on the spot where collective pooling of riffs and melodies were born without giving thought as to whose composition it was. If more than two writers were involved in the collaboration, it probably got tagged "Basie."
  7. ^ Chilton, Martin (August 21, 2014). "Count Basie: a jazz pioneer who still inspires". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved February 26, 2017. ...soaring majestically on favourites such as Jumpin' at the Woodside, Li'l Darlin' and April in Paris.
  8. ^ Murray, Albert (2011). Rifftide: The Life and Opinions of Papa Jo Jones. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. p. 146. ISBN 9780816673001. Jumping, or jumping up and down, was slang for sex. Hence the title of one of Basie's best-known tunes, "Jumpin' at the Woodside," is a triple entendre. It could be jumping as in "the joint is jumping"; or lively, jumping as in dancing; or jumping as in sex. The Woodside Hotel was a favorite spot for dalliances with prostitutes. Jones often recalls the band going up to the Woodside to "buy booty on credit."
  9. ^ Lester, Larry (2001). Black Baseball's National Showcase: The East-West All-Star Game, 1933-1953. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press. p. 306. ISBN 9780803280007. OCLC 45951683. Customarily, teams in New York stayed at the Woodside Hotel, a black-owned hotel.
  10. ^ a b Wilson, Sondra K. (February 17, 2004). Meet Me at the Theresa: The Story of Harlem's Most Famous Hotel. New York: Atria Books. p. 63. ISBN 9781451646160. OCLC 869437155.
  11. ^ Robinson, Frazier; Bauer, Paul (1999). Catching Dreams: My Life in the Negro Baseball Leagues. Syracuse: Syracuse University Press. p. 131. ISBN 9780585248127. OCLC 45731507. When the Elites went to New York, we stayed at the Woodside Hotel. The Woodside was a famous hotel because that's where a lot of jazz musicians stayed. There was even a song about it called "Jumpin' at the Woodside." It was a favorite of Count Basie's Band....They had a nightclub right there at the Woodside, so you could stay there and go see the show that evening.
  12. ^ Dance, Stanley (1980). The World of Count Basie. New York: Da Capo Press. p. 78. ISBN 9780684166049. OCLC 6331123. (Earle Warren) When we finally got to New York, I moved into the Woodside Hotel, on 142nd Street....There were a lot of ballplayers....The band had stayed there before, when they played the Apollo....There were cooking facilities in some rooms, and a big kitchen where people could cook and take food up to their rooms....it was like a music house, and we rehearsed in the basement.
  13. ^ Marshall, Jack; Krentzlin, Doug; Fuller, Thomas D. The Screamlined Revue! Hellzapoppin (Audience Guide) (PDF). Arlington, VA: The American Century Theater. p. 15. Lastly, and most famously, were Whitey's Steppers, popularly known as "Whitey's Lindy Hoppers." Almost all of the major songs in the original show were accompanied by dance routines, but the Lindy Hop routine (performed to the song "Jumping at the Woodside") was by far the most famous. Astounding in its accuracy and athleticism, it took the audience’s breath away every night. Fortunately, a version of the routine (to different music) is preserved in the otherwise forgettable 1941 film version of Hellzapoppin.
  14. ^ a b Manning, Frankie; Cynthia R. Millman (2007). Frankie Manning: Ambassador of Lindy Hop. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Temple University Press. pp. 162, 172, 176. ISBN 978-1-59213-563-9. OCLC 76261647.
  15. ^ "Hellzapoppin' to "Jumpin' at the Woodside"". YouTube. August 15, 2007. Archived from the original on 2021-12-15. Retrieved February 15, 2016.
  16. ^ Hamp and Getz (1955)
  17. ^ 아프리카 몽고메리 수도사...라이브! (1975년)
  18. ^ 오스카 피터슨이 연기한 카운트 베이시(1955년)와 새치와 조쉬(1974년)에서
  19. ^ Alix Combelle과 그의 스윙 밴드(1940)에서
  20. ^ Miami의 버디 리치(1958), Burnin' Beat(1962), Very Live at Buddy's Place(1974)
  21. ^ 베이시와 함께 노래(1958년)와 마을 문에서 무도회(1963년)를 녹음했다.
  22. ^ Barnes, Mike (March 13, 2015). "Gene Patton Dead: 'Gong Show' Dancing Machine Was 82". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved February 28, 2017. At a random moment during the game show, Barris would introduce Patton, and the curtain would part, bringing the shuffling stagehand with the painter’s cap onstage to the sounds of “Jumpin’ at the Woodside,” a jazz tune made popular by Count Basie. His dance sent everyone on the set — Barris, the judges, the cameramen, the audience — into an uncontrollable boogie.
  23. ^ Swing Kids 사운드트랙, 11번 트랙 참조
  24. ^ Hyman, Vicki (March 21, 2010). "Frank Sinatra lands on Broadway". NJ.com. Retrieved February 26, 2017. "Come Fly Away" embraces the American song book, including works not primarily associated with Sinatra and even instrumental showcases like Count Basie's "Jumpin' at the Woodside," which concludes the first act.
  25. ^ "Fallout 76 Soundtrack - All Fallout 76 Songs on GameWatcher".